Doing Things Wrong

Fretboard Radiusing

image
Fretboard Radius Blocks

I make all my fretboards 12 inches, guitar or bass, fretted or fretless. I just like that, and also, it doesn't matter that much as long as you stay away from the extremes. 12-inches is a nice comfortable curve for chording on, and also doesn't require as much work and mess to carve as a smaller radius. I find it is a good compromise overall. I can make a 12-inch radius from flat pretty successfully with just a sanding block. StewMac's pre-radiused boards are 16-inches and are quick and easy to re-radius to 12. Although I made tooling for everything from 7 to 16, I don't use any of it. Luckily, I made extra tooling for 12 inches before I broke down the manufacturing plant.

I cannot recommend StewMac's sanding blocks, as they are too narrow and too short. I made my blocks from scraps of 1"x4" maple ( 3/4" x 3-1/2" actual ) and backed them with scraps of pine for a better grip. The 9" length matches a half-sheet of sandpaper, which wraps around the sides so you can hold it in place. When the paper is dull, you can get a bit more out of it by turning it 90 degrees to use the unused strips at the edges.

I put the workpiece on a scrap of 2x4, and use the edges to guide the block. I recommend wearing leather work gloves, 80 grit doesn't do nice things to your hands. You can go through a lot of sandpaper with some tropical hardwoods. It is best to radius a board before cutting to length, as the ends invariably come out a little off, and when you remove them, you'll have a perfect piece. I do most of the work with 80 grit, then intermediate finishing with 100. After the board has been slotted and glued on and the neck fully shaped and bound, I do final radiusing before installing the markers, then polish up afterward with finer grits. This assures a nice smooth flat fretboard to install the frets on, with little to no fret dressing required.

pickguardian-neck-radius-gauges.pdf


Comments on Fretboard Radiusing

Questions or Inquiries?

Just want to say Hello? Sign the .

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Click image to replace if unable to read.

Enter the digits from the image above, except for the last one:

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.


This fretless sounds really cool, and is super-easy to play, as you no longer have to stretch your hand unnaturally just to make ordinary patterns. It is set up with flats I found in the junk box. Can anyone tell me what kind of strings have blue thread leaders? The intonation fell right in, which is surprising considering the bridge was previously set up for 25.5" guitar strings. ( Actually, how important is intonation on a fretless anyway? )

Printed from luthierylabs.com